Abstract

Due to the ability of soil bacteria to solubilize minerals, fix N2 and mobilize nutrients entrapped in the organic matter, their role in nutrient turnover and plant fitness is of high relevance in forest ecosystems. Although several authors have already studied the organic matter decomposing enzymes produced by soil and plant root-interacting bacteria, most of the works did not account for the activity of cell wall-attached enzymes. Therefore, the enzyme deployment strategy of three bacterial collections (genera Luteibacter, Pseudomonas and Arthrobacter) associated with Quercus spp. roots was investigated by exploring both cell-bound and freely-released hydrolytic enzymes. We also studied the potential of these bacterial collections to produce enzymes involved in the transformation of plant and fungal biomass. Remarkably, the cell-associated enzymes accounted for the vast majority of the total activity detected among Luteibacter strains, suggesting that they could have developed a strategy to maintain the decomposition products in their vicinity, and therefore to reduce the diffusional losses of the products. The spectrum of the enzymes synthesized and the titres of activity were diverse among the three bacterial genera. While cellulolytic and hemicellulolytic enzymes were rather common among Luteibacter and Pseudomonas strains and less detected in Arthrobacter collection, the activity of lipase was widespread among all the tested strains. Our results indicate that a large fraction of the extracellular enzymatic activity is due to cell wall-attached enzymes for some bacteria, and that Quercus spp. root bacteria could contribute at different levels to carbon (C), phosphorus (P) and nitrogen (N) cycles.

Highlights

  • Forests are considered relevant ecosystems since they provide essential environmental services; for instance, they contribute to the protection of biodiversity and soils [1]

  • 73 bacterial strains isolated from the root endosphere of melojo oak trees as well as from the rhizosphere of the same host and holm oak trees were studied in this work

  • The production of enzymes involved in the degradation of cellulose, hemicelluloses and other polysaccharides, as well as in the degradation of compounds based on N and P was assayed in both cell-wall associated and supernatant fractions (Figs 1–3 and S3 Table)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Forests are considered relevant ecosystems since they provide essential environmental services; for instance, they contribute to the protection of biodiversity and soils [1]. Temperate deciduous forests contain approximately 0.66 trillion trees [2] and they represent a carbon (C)

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call